Question

Select the best evidence to support the statement that the narrator believes Lonnie has good judgment.
Last year, Lonnie and I were out back in Ponzini doing nothing, just yakking it up. Now, I guess I should mention that Lonnie's my best friend. Except calling him my best friend doesn't tell how tight we are. My dad says that if Lonnie told me to jump, I'd ask, "How high?" He's being sarcastic, my dad, but he's right in a way. Because here's the thing: Lonnie wouldn't tell me to jump unless he had a good reason. So, yeah, I'd ask, "How high?" He'd ask me "How high?" too if I told him to jump. It doesn't mean a thing. I've known Lonnie since I was two and he was three.

Answers

Answer
are you sure promise that you will not wrong

Lonnie wouldn't tell me to jump unless he had a good reason. So, yeah, I'd ask, "How high?"
Answered by GPT 3.5
Lonnie wouldn't tell me to jump unless he had a good reason.
Answered by GPT 3.5
Yes, I am sure that "Lonnie wouldn't tell me to jump unless he had a good reason. So, yeah, I'd ask, 'How high?'" is the best evidence to support the statement that the narrator believes Lonnie has good judgment. This shows that the narrator trusts Lonnie's judgment and would follow his instructions because he knows that Lonnie would only ask for something if there was a valid reason.

Related Questions